The Colonial Church

The crown, as elsewhere in the Americas, worked to solidify the
Andean colonial order in tandem with the church to which it was tied by
royal patronage dating from the late fifteenth century. Having
accompanied Francisco Pizarro and his force during the conquest, the
Roman Catholic friars proceeded zealously to carry out their mission to
convert the indigenous peoples to Christianity. In this endeavor, the
church came to play an important role in the acculturation of the
natives, drawing them into the cultural orbit of the Spanish settlers.
It also waged a constant war to extirpate native religious beliefs. Such
efforts met with only partial success, as the syncretic nature of Andean
Roman Catholicism today attests. With time, however, the evangelical
mission of the church gave way to its regular ecclesiastical endeavors
of ministering to the growing Spanish and creole population.

By the end of the century, the church was beginning to acquire
important financial assets, particularly bequests of land and other
wealth, that would consolidate its position as the most important
economic power during the colonial period. At the same time, it assumed
the primary role of educator, welfare provider, and, through the
institution of the Inquisition, guardian of orthodoxy throughout the
viceroyalty. Together, the church-state partnership served to
consolidate and solidify the crown authority in Peru that, despite
awesome problems of distance, rough terrain, and slow communications,
endured almost three centuries of continuous and relatively stable rule.

Silver production, meanwhile, began to enter into a prolonged period
of decline in the seventeenth century. This decline also slowed the
important transatlantic trade while diminishing the importance of Lima
as the economic hub of the viceregal economy. Annual silver output at
Potosí, for example, fell in value from a little over 7 million pesos
in 1600 to almost 4.5 million pesos in 1650 and finally to just under 2
million pesos in 1700. Falling silver production, the declining
transatlantic trade, and the overall decline of Spain itself during the
seventeenth century have long been interpreted by historians as causing
a prolonged depression both in the viceroyalties of Peru and New Spain.
However, economic historian Kenneth J. Andrien has challenged this view,
maintaining that the Peruvian economy, rather than declining, underwent
a major transition and restructuring. After silver production and the
transatlantic trade eroded the export economy, they were replaced by
more diversified, regionalized, and autonomous development of the
agricultural and manufacturing sectors. Merchants, miners, and producers
simply shifted their investments and entrepreneurial activities away
from mining and the transatlantic trade into internal production and
import-substituting opportunities, a trend already visible on a small
scale by the end of the previous century. The result was a surprising
degree of regional diversification that stabilized the viceregal economy
during the seventeenth century.

This economic diversification was marked by the rise and expansion of
the great estates or haciendas that were carved out of abandoned native
land as a result of the demographic collapse. The precipitous decline of
the native population was particularly severe along the coast and had
the effect of opening up the fertile bottom lands of the river valleys
to Spanish immigrants eager for land and farming opportunities. A
variety of crops were raised: sugar and cotton along the northern coast;
wheat and grains in the central valleys; grapes, olives, and sugar along
the entire coast. The highlands, depending on geographic and climatic
conditions, underwent a similar hacienda expansion and diversification
of production. There, coca, potatoes, livestock, and other indigenous
products were raised in addition to some coastal crops, such as sugar
and cereals.

This transition toward internal diversification in the colony also
included early manufacturing, although not to the extent of agrarian
production. Textile manufacturing flourished in Cusco, Cajamarca, and
Quito to meet popular demand for rough-hewn cotton and woolen garments.
A growing intercolonial trade along the Pacific Coast involved the
exchange of Peruvian and Mexican silver for oriental silks and
porcelain. In addition, Arequipa and then Nazca and Ica became known for
the production of fine wines and brandies. And throughout the
viceroyalty, small-scale artisan industries supplied a range of
lower-cost goods only sporadically available from Spain and Europe,
which were now mired in the seventeenth-century depression.

If economic regionalization and diversification worked to stabilize
the colonial economy during the seventeenth century, the benefits of
such a trend did not, as it turned out, accrue to Madrid. The crown had
derived enormous revenues from silver production and the transatlantic
trade, which it was able to tax and collect relatively easily. The
decline in silver production caused a precipitous fall in crown revenue,
particularly in the second half of the seventeenth century. For example,
revenue remittances to Spain dropped from an annual average of almost
1.5 million pesos in the 1630s to less than 128,000 pesos by the 1680s.
The crown tried to restructure the tax system to conform to the new
economic realities of seventeenth-century colonial production but was
rebuffed by the recalcitrance of emerging local elites. They tenaciously
resisted any new local levies on their production, while building
alliances of mutual convenience and gain with local crown officials to
defend their vested interests.

The situation further deteriorated, from the perspective of Spain,
when Madrid began in 1633 to sell royal offices to the highest bidder,
enabling self-interested creoles to penetrate and weaken the royal
bureaucracy. The upshot was not only a sharp decline in vital crown
revenues from Peru during the century, which further contributed to the
decline of Spain itself, but an increasing loss of royal control over
local creole oligarchies throughout the viceroyalty. Lamentably, the
sale of public offices also had longer-term implications. The practice
weakened any notion of disinterested public service and infused into the
political culture the corrosive idea that office-holding was an
opportunity for selfish, private gain rather than for the general public
good.

If the economy of the viceroyalty reached a certain steady state
during the seventeenth century, its population continued to decline.
Estimated at around 3 million in 1650, the population of the viceroyalty
finally reached its nadir at a little over 1 million inhabitants in
1798. It rose sharply to almost 2.5 million inhabitants by 1825. The
1792 census indicated an ethnic composition of 13 percent Spaniards, 56
percent native American, and 27 percent castas (mestizos), the
latter category the fastest-growing group because of both acculturation
and miscegenation between Spaniards and natives.

Demographic expansion and the revival of silver production, which had
fallen sharply at the end of the seventeenth century, promoted a period
of gradual economic growth from 1730 to 1770. The pace of growth then
picked up in the last quarter of the eighteenth century, partly as a
result of the so-called Bourbon reforms of 1764, named after a branch of
the ruling French Bourbon family that ascended to the Spanish throne
after the death of the last Habsburg in 1700.

In the second half of the eighteenth century, particularly during the
reign of Charles III (1759-1788), Spain turned its reform efforts to
Spanish America in a concerted effort to increase the revenue flow from
its American empire. The aims of the program were to centralize and
improve the structure of government, to create more efficient economic
and financial machinery, and to defend the empire from foreign powers.
For Peru, perhaps the most far-reaching change was the creation of a new
viceroyalty in the Río de la Plata (River Plate) region in 1776 that
radically altered the geopolitical and economic balance in South
America. Upper Peru was detached administratively from the old
Viceroyalty of Peru, so that profits from Potosí no longer flowed to
Lima and Lower Peru, but to Buenos Aires. With the rupture of the old
Lima-Potosí circuit, Lima suffered an inevitable decline in prosperity
and prestige, as did the southern highlands (Cusco, Arequipa, and Puno).
The viceregal capital's status declined further from the general
measures to introduce free trade within the empire. These measures
stimulated the economic development of peripheral areas in northern
South America (Venezuela) and southern South America (Argentina), ending
Lima's former monopoly of South American trade.

As a result of these and other changes, the economic axis of Peru
shifted northward to the central and northern Sierra and central coast.
These areas benefited from the development of silver mining,
particularly at Cerro de Pasco, which was spurred by a series of
measures taken by the Bourbons to modernize and revitalize the industry.
However, declining trade and production in the south, together with a
rising tax burden levied by the Bourbon state, which fell heavily on the
native peasantry, set the stage for the massive native American revolt
that erupted with the Túpac Amaru rebellion in 1780-82.